I'm still trying to mess with the transliteration (it should be "Shàolín Zúqiú", and for some reason TheMovieDB has that horrible title for Ghost in the Shell instead of the correct 攻殻機動隊 which transliterates into Kōkaku Kidōtai), however the result isn't bad.
And here the TV Shows one, this is greener and less polished:

The man hours or more like man days that I have could have saved if I had known about filebot! Fantastic tool and community.

I started using filebot a few days ago and quickly ran into a problem with naming my files based on audio stream. Turns out some of my movies do not have the best track set to the default and/or to audio[0]. I noticed others on here also wanting to have the "best" audio shown in the file name, or at least tag it with Atmos or DTS-X if it had it.

Once I started working with it I couldn't stop until I had it the way I wanted. Crouching Tiger has DTS 6Ch English on audio[0] and it is set as the default and Atmos is on [3]. I also decided to do a best audio option based on my own scale where object based sound gets a score of 10, DTS-HD MA gets a score of 20 and
AAC gets 50. I haven't fully fleshed this out.

The primary goal was to get the audio track that is set as default, which may not be [0] and use that for the file name. I also wanted to make sure my Atmos movies got tagged as such even if the Atmos track was not set as default.

Example where DTS is set as default but Atmos is available and where DTS-X is the default.

The sharing is great, the more knowledge the better. I am partial to knowing in the file name what the properties of the 'default' audio track and if there is a better track available. Because of that I check each audio track.

This is what I currently have and is fine but I have all of my movies stored between two different drives labeled Y and W. I saw the snippet of code to tell Filebot to essentially use whichever drive has more free space to decide where to store said movies.

I attempted something like this, but it puts the ({vf}) as part of the movies folder title instead of using the command for the video size and it looks like that snippet has stuff for tv shows.

Anyone mind correcting me on this? I'd appreciate any help I can get to make this right. I also am curious about the drive size code, does it only scan the drives on the initial scan of the movie titles and move them into the same folder or does it take into account each movie as it fills up the drive?

/Anime/World End - What Do You Do at the End of the World Are You Busy Will You Save Us/Season 1/World End - What Do You Do at the End of the World? Are You Busy? Will You Save Us? - 1x12 - The Happiest Girl in the World

this is easier to see like so

/Anime/ = folder
World End - What Do You Do at the End of the World Are You Busy Will You Save Us = n (folder)
/
Season 1 = folder
/
World End - What Do You Do at the End of the World? Are You Busy? Will You Save Us? = n (filename)
-
1x12 = s00e00 / sxe.pad(2)
-
The Happiest Girl in the World = t

for every n (folder or filename) of t you need to remove/replace e.g. '?' from the full path, you see ?

It takes it from wherever I have it stored and moves it to my Media hard drive and puts it in the correct MOVIE folder. I separate my movies based on resolution. Movies is anything under 720p. Movies HD is anything from 720-2160p. Movies 4K is any movie 2160 and over. It also creates a folder based on the movie title and year. You can easily change the names of the folders or drives in the first section of code.

It shows the rating and runtime then will list up to 3 of the actors, 3 of the genres and then gives information about if the movie is 3D, resolution, audio type and channels.

IF the information is included in the original file name it will also parse and then include in the new name the information such as UNRATED, UNCUT, DIRECTORS CUT, EXTENDED, REMASTERED, UNCENSORED, SPECIAL EDITION, REDUX. You can easily add to this list in the code if you have other version information.

At the end, notice the code {subt}....this will include the correct subtitle extension if Filebot determines the file being renamed is in fact a subtitle file. If the file is NOT a subtitle file this is ignored.

and create:M:\TV Series\Bar Rescue\Season 5 [2016, 2017]\Bar Rescue - S05E14 - [2017-02-26] - I Know What You Did Last Summit.avi

The code moves the file(s) into the Media drive under the TV Series folder and then into the SHOW NAME folder. If there is a season associated with the file it puts the file(s) into the season folder. If however, the episode(s) are specials then they will be put into a Specials folder. The file name is the Show Name - season # and episode # - airdate of the episode - name of the episode if there is one.

When it comes to TV series I don't feel the need to have all the video and audio information in the file name. I don't really care. I have debated this, however, a few times as I have a few series where I had to piece together the seasons, thus some episodes in a season may be 720p and some may be 320p and some others 580p. IF I had the video info listed I could more easily either find new ones matching or re-encode myself. But, not really top of my list of things to work on atm.

Last edited by ChefGregS on 19 Jan 2019, 03:30, edited 3 times in total.